The new four-part Bravo docuseries “Welcome to Waverly” (premiering Monday at 10 p.m.) sends seven diverse young professionals, each from a different large city, to Waverly, Kan., population 563. Drama ensues as Bravo’s outsiders go to church, experience a Civil War re-enactment and are paired up with a local in their respective fields.

For the one New Yorker on the show, Brooklyn bartender Melissa Meier, 35, that actually meant heading one town over to Williamsburg, Kan. — there are four churches but no bars in Waverly — to work at Guy & Mae’s. There, the vegetarian served pork ribs and low-alcohol beer and connected with the tavern’s owner, Lori Thompson, a 48-year-old widow and mother of three.

“It’s a show about seeing if you can find a common ground,” Meier tells The Post. “It’s also pretty f–king funny.”

Here, each woman tells The Post about herself and the experience.

Melissa | The Brooklynite

Chuck France/Bravo

Lives: In a small Greenpoint apartment with her brother Andrew and two rescue dogs. She was raised in Collingswood, NJ, by a single mother, moved to the city when she was 20, and has lived there ever since. “I fell deeply in love with NYC at a very young age,” says Meier, who is in a long-distance relationship.

Why she loves NYC: “If people don’t like you, they’re just like, ‘F–k you!’ ” Meier says. “We all put it out there, 100 percent, all the time.”

Political beliefs: “I’m definitely a liberal and a gay-rights activist,” says Meier, who has three brothers, all of whom are gay. But, she says, she’s not close-minded, and she wanted to go on the show to “try to find the common ground over a drink.”

Biggest Waverly worry: “I was nervous to see 500 people in red hats waving flags,” says Meier. She also worried about how she would be perceived. “Am I going to be too loud? Am I going to curse too much? Am I going to be too fast? An entire kind of cloud of self doubt comes over you.”

Actual Waverly low: None of her major fears came true, but she did miss NYC’s little conveniences. “There wasn’t even food delivery,” she says.

Her take on Lori: “We’re very similar in terms of our work ethic, doing whatever needs to get done to make things run smoothly,” says Meier, who slings drinks at the Starliner in Bushwick and Oak & Iron in Greenpoint. “We definitely connected about her being a female business owner.”

What she misses about Kansas: “The quietness, the slowness,” she says. “They have beautiful sunsets. Kansas is really pretty. Sometimes it is nice to just sit back.”

Lori | The Kansan

Chuck France/Bravo

Lives: On the outskirts of Williamsburg, Kan., where she was born and raised, with her 17-year-old daughter, two dogs and three cats. “It’s been my way of life my whole life,” she tells The Post. Two older sons live away from home, and her husband passed away two years ago from lymphoma.

Her thoughts on New York: “My only experience is what you see in the movies and on TV, the club scene and that sort of thing,” says Thompson, a fan of “Sex and the City.” That show, she says, is “kind of my New York nightlife experience in a nutshell.”

Political beliefs: With the daily pressures of running a business, “I don’t really have time to be very involved in politics,” says Thompson, who will only say that she didn’t vote for Trump or Clinton in the last election. “I guess I would probably be conservative, just because I was brought up that way.”

Her take on Melissa: “We had a lot of fun,” says Thompson. “We just brought out the devilish side of each other.”

Why she loves Kansas: “I live out here for the quiet,” she says. “I think being in a city would drive me batty. Quiet, cows running in the distance, is my idea of a perfect day.”